The Stroumboulopouli

The Stroumboulopouli

The place to get the latest news on what’s coming up on #Gtonight. Find out what Canada’s boyfriend is up to. Share stories, pictures, favourite tv and radio episodes.

CBC TV & Radio shows plus HNIC

His work with Artists for Peace and Justice

UN Ambassadorship for The World Food Programme

Monday, November 09, 2009

How will you remember?

"We must remember. If we do not, the sacrifice of those one hundred thousand Canadian lives will be meaningless. They died for us, for their homes and families and friends, for a collection of traditions they cherished and a future they believed in; they died for Canada. The meaning of their sacrifice rests with our collective national consciousness; our future is their monument."

Heather Robertson,
A Terrible Beauty,
The Art of Canada at War.
Toronto, Lorimer, 1977.


The Hour has hosted several guests who have witnessed war from various perspectives...a "leader", Ret. General Rick Hillier, "a wounded warrior", Master Corporal Paul Franklin and a "storyteller", embedded journalist Scott Kesterson. As television viewers we gain insight from their reality...one that is often harsh and painfully sad. As Canadians, on November 11th, we are afforded the opportunity to acknowledge and reflect upon the sacrifices made, both past and present, of our military.
How will you remember?

Often the individual act of remembrance is a personal one. For some it may simply involve wearing a poppy over the heart. For others it may mean attending a local Remembrance Day ceremony. Each year part of my Remembrance Day involves sharing a story with elementary school age children. Sometimes the story is to share a significant historical fact, while others have been designed to encourage empathy. This year the theme is simple...returning home. Attention will be paid to the now, all too familiar, Repatriation Ceremony.

Although not evident unless you look closely, the photograph above involves such a ceremony. The gravemarker is located at the Cabaret Rouge British Cemetery, Souchez. This particular grave once contained the remains of a Canadian soldier killed during WWI. In 2000 the grave was exhumed and the remains entrusted to Canada in a ceremony that took place in Vimy, France. The remains were returned to Canadian soil in the most well-publicized Repatriation Ceremony ever. These are the remains that have been laid within the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, in a sarcophagus placed at the foot of the National War Memorial in Ottawa. I vividly recall watching this event on television. I thought about that fact that to us, this soldier was an unknown victim of war. But at that one time he was a son and perhaps a brother, husband or father...he meant something to someone. Now he means a great deal to an entire nation.


Unlike the ceremony that surrounded the 'unknown' one, we now know the names of our fallen. We watch the grief on the faces of their loved ones, as a flag draped casket comes home. In recent years, the Repatriation Ceremony has taken on a new dimension. It simply started with everyday folks lining the overpasses of Highway 401 between Trenton and Toronto. They stood, with Canadian flags in hand, to await the motorcade of a fallen Canadian soldier on the way to the Coronor's Office in downtown Toronto. The movement grew and eventually led to this portion of the route being renamed the "Highway of Heroes". The impact of this simple gesture has been tremendous. The event even has its own song, aptly named Highway of Heroes.

Written by Newstalk 1010's Bob Reid (host of Rock Talk), the single was released on CD/itunes last week. A portion of sales will be donated to Wounded Warriors, a charity that "delivers quality of life, financial, benevolent and moral assistance" to Canadian soldiers. This is another way one can participate in an act of remembrance and support a very worthy cause.


Sunday, November 08, 2009

A new radio show kicks off the week of November 8th!

The moment you have been waiting for is finally here!! Tonight, the launch of The Strombo Show on CBC Radio 2, from 8 pm to midnight EST. Click here for a preview of what you will hear tonight. Don't forget to check out the radio program's Facebook page. Happy listening...

Coming up on The Hour:


Monday, November 9th




Bestselling author and editor-at-large of Esquire, A. J. Jacobs.



Isabella Rossellini Pictures, Images and Photos

Actress, filmmaker and activist, Isabella Rossellini.

Tuesday, November 10th


British journalist and author of McMafia: Crime Without Frontiers, Misha Glenny.


Valerie bertinelli Pictures, Images and Photos

Making her return visit to The Hour, actress and author Valerie Bertinelli.

Wednesday, November 11th

Remembrance Day...please observe 2 minutes of silence at 11 o'clock. Also, look for a special Remembrance Day post later this week.

The Hour has some terrific repeat interviews today: actors Patricia Clarkson and Clive Owen as well as Canadian music icon Michael Bublé.

Thursday, November 12th

Cory Doctrow Pictures, Images and Photos

Perhaps in your travels on the internet, you have come across the site boingboing.net. One of the people behind it it Toronto born Cory Doctorow, a science fiction author, blogger and journalist. His new book, Makers, is being released this week.


Morgan Freeman Pictures, Images and Photos

I have always been a fan of Morgan Freeman. My favourite of his films is a 1997 suspense/thriller, Kiss the Girls. If you've not seen it, check it out...the ending will surprise you! I am eagerly looking forward to his latest project with Canadian filmmaker Paul Saltzman (a previous guest on The Hour). Prom Night in Mississippi is a documentary that follows the events surrounding the first ever integrated prom at Charleston High School. The year of this history making event? 2008.

On November 13, Freeman and Paul Saltzman will be participating in a special opening night benefit screening at the Varsity Cinema in Toronto. The benefit is in support of Saltzman's Moving Beyond Prejudice educational DVD package. Proceeds will be used to donate the DVD packages to Canadian schools who would otherwise be unable to purchase the learning tool. Ticket information can be found here.

Friday, November 13th

[Are you superstitious???]

This week's 'best of' show includes Bill Maher, Hugh Dillon and Vivica Fox.

Thursday, November 05, 2009

George links that may be of interest

I just wanted to share with everyone some links people send us of Strombo news.

This is an interview on September 27th with George Stroumboulopoulos by a blogger in Vancouver Miss 604 Rebecca Bollwitt.
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Then there was the golfing pictures found on WireImage.com This features both George Stroumboulopoulos and Jian Ghomeshi at the launch of The Canada California Business Council Golf Tournament. These images may be disturbing to some.
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But what I would like to draw your attention to, if you live in or near the GTA, is an Environmental Dinner that George will be chairing on the 12 of November.

Honourary Event Chair George Stroumboulopoulos invites you to the 16th Annual Charles Sauriol Environmental Dinner for The Living City at Pearson Convention Center, Brampton, on Thursday, November 12, 2009.
This event celebrates the great conservationist and visionary Charles Sauriol C.M. featuring Gord Downie and Mark Mattson from Lake Ontario Waterkeeper who will present Heart of a Lake: an evening of song, dance, poetry and conversation.

Tickets are $150 each. Reservations are required.

Contact Helen Lee at 416-661-6600 ext. 5276 or visit www.charlessauriol.ca

All proceeds support The Conservation Foundation and Oak Ridges Moraine Land Trust.

AND one more link for you... Just found this on Chartattack about The Strombo Show

Strombo Reveals Details Of New CBC Radio Show | CHARTattack